The rules are designed to stop teams from being able to use flexing or active aero parts - this is explicit in the rules as they say that no part may move at all full stop before defining the tests that will be used to police this and the tolerances for movement. There is also specific provision for adjusting those tests without notice should the FIA feel that teams are exploiting flaws in those tests.hardingfv32 wrote:"I'm not asking for more FIA regs, I just want the existing rules to be applied consistently and fairly."
The application of the rules must be consistent enough for a team to use the design that we are discussing. Why proceed with such a design if you are not confident in the testing methods? Fair! This is F1.
"If there is a flaw in the testing procedures that one team is exploiting then the FIA should adjust the tests to make sure that the rules are being applied. There is specific provision within the rules to allow for this."
Could one assume that there is no flaw in the rules, and this is the reason they are not changed?
Brian
Let's say that the police start using a new type of speed camera that uses a normal video feed to work out how fast a car is going; but it has a flaw that means it gets confused when the car has its headlights on. The flaw in the system does not make it legal to speed if you have your headlights on, and if that were the only method the police were using to catch people speeding then there would rightly be an outcry.
The same applies here. The FIA are using a single specific test that is potentially inadequate and it is absolutely fair to ask the FIA to police their own rules appropriately, rather than ask the other teams to try and guess at who is doing what and potentially have more people breaking the rules where originally the RB car wasn't doing this and was perfectly fine.
My number one gripe with the FIA is their seeming utter inability to fairly, impartially, consistently and thoroughly apply and police their own rules. There have been countless examples of inconsistency in the way the rules are applied, from policing the cars to on and off track penalties, with some real innovations being banned on a whim (or a whine) whilst other blatant infractions are either allowed or quietly dealt with over an extended period of time. This is just another example.